They are part of the first phase of 450 prisoners
set to be freed out of the 1,027 names in total.

They include Nasser
Batima, convicted of planning the 2002 Passover Seder suicide-bomb attack on the
Park Hotel in Netanya, in which 30 civilians were killed and 140 were
wounded.

Israel Radio said that the unconfirmed list also named Husam
Badran, head of Hamas terrorist cells in the northern West Bank, who took part
in the planning of the 2001 bombing of the Dolphinarium nightclub in Tel Aviv,
in which 21 youths were murdered, the Park Hotel bombing, and the 2002 bombing of the
Matza Restaurant in Haifa, in which 14 civilians lost their lives.

Other
men listed were Hamas member Yehieh Sinwar, sentenced to five life sentences for
his role in the kidnapping and murder of Sgt. Nachshon Wachsman. Sinwar
is the brother of one of the Hamas men who planned Gilad Schalit’s kidnapping,
and a founding member of Hamas’s military structure in Gaza.

Another name
on the list is Jihad Yarmur, a member of the cell that killed Wachsman during
the failed bid to rescue him from his kidnappers in 1994.

Ahmed Najar,
former commander of a Hamas cell that murdered three Israelis in shooting
attacks, is also to be released, according to Hamas’s Al-Aksa TV.

Islamic
Jihad member Abd al-Hadi Gnaim, a terrorist who hijacked an Egged bus in 1989
traveling from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and drove it over a steep drop, killing 16
passengers, is also reportedly on the list.

Muhammad Shrataha, head of
the cell that kidnapped and murdered Sgt. Avi Sasportas and Pvt. Ilan
Sa’adon in 1989, will also reportedly soon be free.

Additional names
include Fahad Shaludi, convicted of his role in the kidnap and murder of Pvt.
Yaron Hen in 1993, and Muhammad Atun, Mussa Akawi and Majad Abu Katish, members
of a Hamas cell that kidnapped and murdered Border Police Sgt.- Maj. Nissim
Toledano in 1992.

Two men convicted of stabbing to death yeshiva student
Haim Kerman in 1998 in Jerusalem, Bassam Abu Sanina and Riad Asila, are also on
the list.

According to reports, Muhammad Hamada, convicted of plotting to
fire a missile at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem when it was filled with fans,
will be set free. Na’el Barghouti, the Palestinian prisoner who has served the
most time in an Israeli prison – 30 years – will be released, Hamas
said.

The oldest Palestinian security prisoner, 78-year-old Sami Yunis, is
also slated to be released.

In the first stage, 450 prisoners will be let
go – 280 of whom are serving life sentences.

Schalit will then be sent to
Israel, and another 550 prisoners – including women – will be
released.

One of the women slated to be released was named on a list
published on the website of the Al-Aksa TV channel.

The woman, Ahlam
Tamimi, was the first woman to join the Islamist movement and the person who
drove the suicide bomber who carried out the attack at the Sbarro restaurant at
the corner of King George Street and Jaffa Road in Jerusalem in August
2001. Sixteen people were killed, including five members of the
Schijveschuurder family from the community of Neria in Binyamin.

Attorney
Meir Schijveschuurder, who lost his parents and three siblings in the suicide
bombing, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 2009 that if the woman
responsible for murdering his family was ever released from jail, he would try
to kill her.

“If they her go to, let’s say, Palestine, Gaza Strip – the
Hamas is the government over there – then we going to act according to the same
law, the same Shari’a, which means blood for blood,” he said.

Top
terrorists Marwan Barghouti, Abdullah Barghouti, Ibrahim Hamed and Ahmed Sa’adat
will not be released as part of the deal.